Corrections: February 13, 2018

Feb. 12, 2018

FRONT PAGE

A picture caption with an article on Monday about Representative Nancy Pelosi’s difficulty uniting the Democratic Party misstated the circumstances depicted in the photo. Ms. Pelosi was photographed walking to her office on Friday after the House voted to fund the federal government, not on Wednesday after her eight-hour speech on “Dreamers.”

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An article on Sunday, about a plan in Kentucky to require Medicaid recipients to work or volunteer, misstated the insurance status of Sarah and Matt Burress before getting Medicaid. They had insurance through a job Mr. Burress had before he started his own business, although their coverage did not cover vision care. Additionally, the article misstated Mr. Burress’s medical diagnosis. He learned he had glaucoma, not advanced glaucoma, after getting Medicaid. Finally, the article also misstated when he and his wife enrolled in Medicaid. They enrolled in 2016, not 2015.

INTERNATIONAL

An article on Monday about the crash of a Russian plane that killed 71 passengers misspelled the name of another Russian plane that crashed in December 2016. It was a Tupolev TU-154, not Tupulov.

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An article on Friday about a fight club in Chengdu misidentified an amateur boxer. He is Li Guowei, not Li Weiguo.

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An article on Saturday about Colombian rebels suspending an election campaign misstated the timing of the coming congressional elections in Colombia. They are scheduled for March, not May.

OPINION

An Op-Ed essay on Saturday about the dangers of being a sanitation worker misstated the number of such workers killed on the job annually. It was 31 in 2016, not one a day. The article also incorrectly described the seven people killed by private sanitation trucks in New York City in 2017. They were civilians and workers, not exclusively workers.

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Monday about the longtime Los Angeles Dodger outfielder Wally Moon misstated the year the Los Angeles Coliseum, where the Dodgers played from 1958 until 1962, opened. It was 1923, not 1932.

Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.